Lim published this novelher tenth work of fictionbecause publishers in her native Singapore found it too controversial; child slavery and sexual predation are among its themes. Underlying those, however, is a sort of reverse Wuthering Heights love story. The heir to the magnificent House of Wu enjoys a loving and joyful friendship with the beautiful Han, sold to his family at age four. For years they are virtually inseparable. Then Wu is forced to see Han as only a bondmaida lowly creature indeed in that highly stratified and sexist society. The writing is infelicitous, but the plot moves right along. The story ends in tragedy, as such stories must. An interesting addition to Asian studies collections that fully conveys the superstition and cruelty that permeated 1950s Singapore.Judith Kicinski, Sarah Lawrence Coll. Lib., Bronxville, N.Y.
A popular Singapore writer makes her American debut with a maudlin take on doomed love between master and slave.
It's a supposedly shocking storywith its revelation that slavery was still practiced in 1950s Singaporebut, in fact, the shock is muted in a tale that has little modern resonance: Except for brief mentions of automobiles, the setting could be any time in Chinese history. The lack of concrete detail, the character's cozy chats with gods, and the prophetic dreams punctuating the narrative also make it seem more a sentimental melodrama than a searing indictment of hidden viciousness. When Han turns four, her hard- pressed pregnant mother sells her to the rich House of Wu. Han is to be a bondmaid, one of the enslaved women who clean and who must endure the lascivious attentions of visiting priests as well as male family members. Little Han is so upset by the sale that she becomes extremely ill, or, as the household sees it, possessed by demons that have to exorcised. When she recovers, she attaches herself to young Master Wu, the six-year-old grandson of the Matriarch and Patriarch. The children become friends and secret playmates. Meanwhile, the older bondmaids, jealous of Han's emerging beauty and spirit, plot her downfall. Finally, young Wu goes away to school, coming back only to marry the daughter of the House of Chang. Han, though, has never forgotten him. Eventually, the two become lovers, but when they're discovered, Han, now pregnant, is forced to leave. She gives birth to a son, who's taken from her and replaced with the baby girl Wu's wife has just borne. As storm clouds gather, Wu embraces the dying Han; following her death, the narrative suggests, she becomes a goddess, one who "always saw and heard with compassion"except in matters concerning the Wu and Chang Houses.
Pulp fiction with an exotic gloss.